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Post by scrappyunderdog on Jun 19, 2022 18:17:36 GMT -5
Nice game. The shutdown by Schreiber might have given us some momentum in the bottom of the 8th to get those 3 extra runs.
I am not a huge fan of Vazquez, but I also wouldn't mind if the RS reached out to him for a short extension, like two years plus an option. The catching market is tight, and it could get expensive to trade for anyone, and I'm not sure there are any FA catchers.
And nice one-out save by Houck. I'd have preferred Danish to hold on, but I have Houck on a few teams. The one-out saves kind of make me laugh.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Jun 19, 2022 18:58:37 GMT -5
Pete Abraham @peteabe · 6m 1.77 ERA for Pivetta in his last 9 starts.
There he is again. Refsnyder with a big two-out single to make it 3-1. I'm not sure what happens when Kike returns, but based on his performance, the dude is certainly going to get some interest next year. Arroyo should be DFA's Hell, Danish too
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Jun 19, 2022 19:12:47 GMT -5
Bill Koch @billkoch25 · 3h Alex Cora walking to the mound looking thoroughly perturbed.
Tanner Houck could have had the weekend off. He's now pitching in a second game that should have been put to bed easily.
Red Sox are 36-31. They're 9-1-2 in their last 12 series.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Jun 19, 2022 19:16:53 GMT -5
Nick Pivetta K’s 10 in another dominant start, Boston Red Sox beat Cardinals to win series Published: Jun. 19, 2022, 4:49 p.m.
By Christopher Smith | csmith@masslive.com
BOSTON — Nick Pivetta dominated again, striking out 10 and allowing just one run, four hits and four walks in 7 innings.
Three of the four walks came in the two innings. He settled down thereafter.
The Red Sox won 6-4 over the Cardinals to take the three-game series, 2-1.
Boston held on again after leading 6-1 heading into the ninth. Tyler Danish allowed a three-run homer, forcing manager Alex Cora to bring in Tanner Houck for the save.
Pivetta has pitched at least 6 innings in eight of his past nine starts. He has pitched 7 or more innings in five of those starts and he has mixed in a complete game.
The 29-year-old righty has allowed just 12 runs in 61 innings (1.77 ERA) in those nine starts.
Pivetta recorded 12 swings-and-misses, including eight with his four-seam fastball that averaged 93.3 mph and topped out at 95.1 mph, per Baseball Savant. He threw 60 four-seamers, 35 knuckle-curveballs and 13 sliders.
Story bashes 10th homer
Trevor Story gave the Red Sox a 1-0 lead in the second inning with a 397-foot home run the opposite way to right field. It left his bat at 104.4 mph.
It marked Story’s 10th homer after he went his first 25 games without one.
The Cardinals tied it 1-1 in the fourth on Harrison Bader’s two-out RBI single.
JBJ delivers at Fenway (again)
Jackie Bradley Jr. untied it in the fifth inning with a two-out RBI single to center field, making it 2-1 Boston.
Bradley has been excellent at Fenway Park this season. He entered Sunday with a .315 batting average, .357 on-base percentage, .489 slugging percentage and .846 OPS here. Thirteen of his 16 extra-base hits have been at Fenway.
Refsnyder provides insurance run
Rob Refsnyder extended the lead to 3-1 in the seventh inning with a two-out RBI single to center field. He jumped on a first-pitch 96.4 mph sinker.
Vázquez extends lead to five with homer
Christian Vázquez extended the lead to 6-1 in the eighth inning with a three-run homer over the Green Monster. He hit it 407 feet.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Jun 19, 2022 19:18:11 GMT -5
How good is Boston Red Sox’s Nick Pivetta right now? ‘Jittery’ righty has 1.71 ERA in past 9 starts and he doesn’t care who’s hitting Updated: Jun. 19, 2022, 6:24 p.m. | Published: Jun. 19, 2022, 6:23 p.m.
By Christopher Smith | csmith@masslive.com
BOSTON — Nick Pivetta said it took him some time to calm down after his start Sunday.
“I’m still a little jittery,” he said during his postgame media session.
Pivetta pumped his fist and shouted as he walked back to the dugout after striking out the side in the seventh inning. He dominated again, punching out 10 and allowing just one run in 7 innings. The Red Sox won 6-4 over the Cardinals here at Fenway Park.
What is he feeling in that moment heading back to the dugout?
“I don’t really know,” Pivetta said. “You’re facing the best hitters in the world at any time and I’m just competing out there. I want to beat the best at all times. I want to finish really strong. So it’s just like that accumulation of everything coming together kind of gets my emotions going. But it’s a lot of fun and I take great pride in what I do.”
Pivetta has pitched at least 6 innings in eight of his past nine starts. He has pitched 7 or more innings in five of those starts and he has mixed in a complete game.
The 29-year-old righty has allowed just 12 runs in 61 innings (1.77 ERA) in those nine starts.
“Not at his best early on, but like I always say, the fastball plays,” manager Alex Cora said. “That’s the bottom line.”
Pivetta walked four of the first 10 batters he faced. But he then went the next 15 outs without walking anyone.
“My arm was kind of lagging behind,” he said. “A lot of misses up and away and then down and in. I got my legs underneath me a lot better.”
Catcher Christian Vázquez said Pivetta found his fastball release point after the four walks.
“And we get back to the normal Pivetta that we know,” Vázquez said.
What is the normal Pivetta?
“When he attacks the zone with fastballs no matter who is hitting,” Vázquez said. “He doesn’t care who’s hitting. He attacks everybody. He’s got a great fastball. If he throws 91 or 96, his fastball is playing all the time. And he’s got a good curveball. So we can survive with that.”
Pivetta said he thinks he’s getting much better at making in-game adjustments.
“I don’t know if I’d make that adjustment last year,” Pivetta said.
Cora said Pivetta beat the middle of the Cardinals lineup with fastballs.
The righty recorded 12 swings-and-misses, including eight with his four-seam fastball that averaged 93.3 mph and topped out at 95.1 mph, per Baseball Savant. He threw 60 four-seamers, 35 knuckle-curveballs and 13 sliders.
His fastball has averaged 93.2 mph this season compared to 94.8 mph last year. But he has dominated with it. He entered Sunday holding opponents to a .164 batting average against his four-seam fastball.
“He’s an electric kid,” Vázquez said. “You guys see it in the playoffs last year. He was pumped up, too. It’s fun when you can help the team win.”
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Jun 19, 2022 19:20:41 GMT -5
Pete Abraham @peteabe · 3h Pinch hitter Juan Yepez crushes a three-run homer and Danish is done.
Houck inherits a 6-4 lead with two outs and the top of the order up.
With the Sox needing to drop a pitcher tomorrow, Danish didn't help himself there.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Jun 19, 2022 19:21:38 GMT -5
Alex Speier @alexspeier · 3h Red Sox, in their first series against a team with a winning record since May 16-18 (when they took 2/3 from the Astros), take 2/3 from the Cardinals to open a stretch of 36/42 against teams over .500.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Jun 19, 2022 19:22:35 GMT -5
Ian Browne @ianmbrowne · 3h With their latest win, 6-4 over the Cardinals, the Red Sox are 9-1-2 in their last 12 series. They are 13-4 in June, outscoring the opposition, 82-51. They are 27-12 since May 10. Tigers come in for three starting Monday. Then a steady stream of playoff-caliber opponents.
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Post by CP_Jon_GoSox on Jun 20, 2022 3:19:23 GMT -5
Rejuvenated Red Sox feeding off 'normal Pivetta' June 19th, 2022 Ian Browne
Ian Browne @ianmbrowne
BOSTON -- Sunday was not just another strong start for the blistering-hot Nick Pivetta. It was also a microcosm of his season.
When Pivetta walked four of the first 10 St. Louis hitters he faced, you wondered if his run of tremendous performances dating back to May 7 was finally going to end.
Instead, Pivetta quickly adjusted and didn’t walk anyone for the rest of the day. Backed by pinpoint fastball location and a knuckle curve that had the Cardinals buckling, Pivetta pitched the Red Sox to a 6-4 win Sunday at Fenway Park in the rubber match of a three-game series.
“I think I was a little jittery today [early], was getting ahead of myself a lot. Arm was kind of lagging behind. A lot of misses up and away and then down and in,” said Pivetta. “Then I got my legs underneath me a lot. It was better after that and just kind of went from there.”
The way Pivetta is able to make quick adjustments now -- be it in-game or from start to start -- explains why he is finally reaching the potential he was tagged with for so long.
“Yeah, I think I’m getting much better,” Pivetta said. “Me and [pitching coach Dave Bush] talked after the game. I don’t know if I make that adjustment last year so I just think it’s kind of the work that I put in, kind of the rhythm that I’m in that I’m able to make that adjustment there.”
When Pivetta started his season 0-4 with a 7.84 ERA in his first five starts, there was a lot of adjusting to do.
After brainstorming with Bush, quality control coach Jason Varitek, manager Alex Cora and other staff members, Pivetta not only got off the mat but has turned into the best version of himself at 29 years old.
In a nine-start run beginning May 7, Pivetta is 7-1 with a 1.77 ERA. During that stretch, Pivetta has gone six innings or more eight times, seven innings or more five times and eight innings or more twice.
Starts like this latest one against the Cards -- seven innings, four hits, 10 strikeouts -- are becoming the norm.
When the top of the seventh inning started Sunday, Cora had two relievers warming up. Almost as if he was sending a message to his manager that such an insurance measure wasn’t necessary, Pivetta fanned three batters in succession to end his 108-pitch day.
As he walked off the mound to the roars of a packed house of 35,989 at Fenway, Pivetta aggressively pumped his right fist as he got close to the dugout.
The Red Sox are feeding off the energy and consistency of the righty who is standing in as the ace at a time Chris Sale and Nathan Eovaldi are both on the injured list.
“He’s an electric kid all the time,” Boston catcher Christian Vázquez said. “And you guys saw it in the playoffs last year.”
Vázquez said that after the laborious stretch to open Sunday’s game, his battery mate got back to being “normal Pivetta.”
At any previous point in his career, it would have been hard to know what that meant given the inconsistency that trailed Pivetta.
Now, the Red Sox know what “normal Pivetta” means, and they are loving it. What is Vázquez’s definition?
“When he attacks the zone with his fastball no matter who’s hitting,” Vázquez said. “He’s got a great fastball. If he throws 91 or 96, his fastball is playing all the time, and he’s got a good curveball so we can survive with that.”
Thriving more than surviving, Pivetta’s in-season turnaround mirrors Boston as a whole.
The team that started the season 11-20 is 9-1-2 in the past 12 series. This, after starting the season 1-7-1 in series play.
The Sox are 13-4 in June, outscoring the opposition 82-51 over that span. They are 26-12 since May 10.
“Yeah, it was a really big series for us personally,” Pivetta said. “They’re a tremendous baseball club. And to bounce back from that [11-2 loss Saturday] night as well that got away from us, I think it just kind of sets in stone what type of baseball team we are, how much hard work we’re putting in as well and how good our guys are kind of running right now.”
Without question, Pivetta has been one of the top pace-setters for his rejuvenated club.
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Post by Kimmi on Jun 20, 2022 7:41:05 GMT -5
Pete Abraham @peteabe · 1h Albert Pujols has 21 baseballs and seven jerseys in his locker to sign.
When superstars retire, they usually sign for players or coaches on the other team on the final day of a series.
David Ortiz always had a stack of requests in 2016. Same with Jeter in '14. Good stuff.
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Post by Kimmi on Jun 20, 2022 7:46:37 GMT -5
Pete Abraham @peteabe · 6m 1.77 ERA for Pivetta in his last 9 starts.
There he is again. Refsnyder with a big two-out single to make it 3-1. I'm not sure what happens when Kike returns, but based on his performance, the dude is certainly going to get some interest next year. That hit was huge after Dalbec failed to get the runner home from 3rd with less than 2 outs.
Refsnyder has earned a longer look, IMO. With the teams having to carry one less pitcher, he's a good candidate to stay up. Not the right handed hitting outfielder that I imagined the team signing, but he's holding his own for now.
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Post by Kimmi on Jun 20, 2022 7:50:50 GMT -5
Nice game. The shutdown by Schreiber might have given us some momentum in the bottom of the 8th to get those 3 extra runs. I am not a huge fan of Vazquez, but I also wouldn't mind if the RS reached out to him for a short extension, like two years plus an option. The catching market is tight, and it could get expensive to trade for anyone, and I'm not sure there are any FA catchers. And nice one-out save by Houck. I'd have preferred Danish to hold on, but I have Houck on a few teams. The one-out saves kind of make me laugh. Big series win against a tough opponent. Yes, it would have been nice if Danish could have held on and Houck did not have to be used. But this one out save is one of the reasons why I am not a fan of 'saves' and 'blown saves' as stats. As far as Vazquez is concerned, I've always been a fan. I also would not mind a short extension for him.
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Post by Kimmi on Jun 20, 2022 7:53:42 GMT -5
Props once again to Pivetta. I love the confidence and emotion he showed in that last inning. Dude is feeling it.
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